What about those 30% of audience to update their browser? On our web platform, the team currently displays a message along the lines of: 'Please update your browser; this site relies on features incompatible with your current version'.
Ok man, for me it's PhD math. Waaaay above my high school level math.
Perhaps you will write a version for layman like me, without advanced math and rather with more verbal explanations and animations.
Strange though... I spent my window after a couple of prompts and effective API time of 13m. Out for 4 hours and a half (why that?). The next day, today, I've tried to repeat the experience - even worse: one prompt for less than 10mins... and then suspended for 8 hours and a half. WTF?
Self improving AI is pure dystopia. Anthropic won't build the singularity, AI itself will build it through self-iterations. Read Yudkowsky's book "If Anyone Builds It, Everyone Dies".
I can't confirm this. Having utilized Opencode for a large project over the past 10 months, with multiple models and agents, we've never run into such 'cache stability issues'."
I have several small SaaS apps running on Rended and Railway. I would like to host them in EU. Wondering if there are similar "managed" PaaS options here. I found none.
Yes: I do say Rust was a struggle and go is a relief.
Yes: rust has very little in common with go.
Yes: Rust is very explicit and go is not.
Yes: Other people find go refreshing because the syntax is more limited and it looks simple on paper.
So, you're right.
IMO: Go is a very "productive" and clean lang/platform when comparing to Rust. It's depends what you're using it for. In my case (for concurrent backends) Go came as a bliss. And that was before AI (vibecoding).
Learning Go after five years of professional struggle with Rust was a relief; Go feels designed for humans to just get the job done. (not a Google fan!) I'll get a ton of downvote for this but it's ok.
I have no idea but for sure they did their homework before making this step. I suppose they're grabbing these business just to stay ahead, in order to prevent the competitors to buy those instead.
IMO, they are buying business just to put them down later to avoid potential competition. The recipe is not new, it has been practiced by Google/Microsoft for many years.